Tilly v. Mitchell & Lewis Co.

121 Wis. 1 | Wis. | 1904

WiNslow, J.

This is an action in equity by property owners suing in their own right to declare void two ordinances passed by the common council on the ground that they unlawfully devote a public street to private use.

The first question raised by the demurrer is whether the plaintiffs, or any of them, show themselves entitled to maintain an action on their own behalf. This court at an early day recognized the rule that in order to entitle a private person to maintain an action for damages resulting from the obstruction of a'public way, or an action in equity to prevent such an obstruction, it must appear that the plaintiff has sustained damage differing not merely in degree, but in kind, from the damage sustained by the general public. In other words, the plaintiff’s injury must be of a different character from that sustained by the public in general. Walker v. Shepardson, 2 Wis. 384. This rule has been consistently followed, and is in accord with the law elsewhere. Clark v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 70 Wis. 593, 36 N. W. 326; Zettel v. West Bend, 79 Wis. 316, 48 N. W. 379; Baier v. Schermerhorn, 96 Wis. 372, 71 N. W. 600. This rule, like many others, is far easier of statement than of application. Indeed, it seems hardly possible to lay down any rule which shall be so clearly stated and so universally applicable that the mere statement of it will solve the question of what constitutes this peculiar and different injury in a given case. It is very well settled that the mere fact that a property *6owner is compelled to pursue a longer route in going to or coming from bis real estate constitutes no peculiar or different injury. Tbis is an injury wbicb is shared by tbe general public, though not in the samé degree. Zettel v. West Bend, supra; Clark v. C. & N. W. R. Co., supra. On the other hand, in Walicer v. Shepardson, supra, the driving of piles in front of plaintiff’s wharf, thus impairing the value and usefulness thereof, was held a special and peculiar injury. So, also, in Barnes v. Racine, 4 Wis. 454, the building of an unlawful bridge in a navigable river, which would impede navigation and interfere with the use of wharfs and docks owned by riparian proprietors, and impair their value, was held to be such an injury. So the unlawful closing of a street or public place, forming the only access to plaintiff’s premises, is always held to be such an injury. Williams v. Smith, 22 Wis. 594. And it is not necessary that the street or place form the only access to the plaintiff’s premises. If the plaintiff’s lots adjoin the street or place to- be closed, even though there be other access, and it is shown that the value of the lots will be greatly diminished and the risk from fire increased, and the lots otherwise injured, the required special and peculiar injury is shown. Pettibone v. Hamilton, 40 Wis. 402. Again, it has been frequently held that one who buys a lot in a plat whereon streets are marked has the right, as against his grantors, to> have the streets on the plat which are appurtenant to his lot and contribute to its value forever kept open, and may enforce that right by private action. Donohoo v. Murray, 62 Wis. 100, 22 N. W. 167; McFarland v. Lindekugel, 107 Wis. 474, 83 N. W. 757. A learned review of the authorities* then existing on this question is found in the case of Stetson v. Faxon, 19 Pick. 147, and is referred to with approval in Enos v. Hamilton, 27 Wis. 256. That was a case where a highway by prescription had been built upon by the defendant, and his building diverted travel from and obscured the plaintiff’s *7warehouse, making it less eligible as a place of business, and productive of less rent, but not cutting off access from other streets, and it was held that the plaintiff had suffered a special damag’e entitling him to sue alone. In discussing the two kinds of injuries, public and private, resulting from the obstruction of a highway, the court in that case well says:

“The people at large are supposed to be injured merely because they cannot pursue a particular track, which is an inconvenience felt by thousands, to be redressed by a prosecution in the name of the commonwealth. They suffer no actual particular injury to their trade or estates, and a prosecution on behalf of the public furnishes the appropriate remedy. But individuals who in their persons or estates suffer great damage, which may be proved to proceed and follow necessarily from the public nuisance, surely stand upon different ground, and each may have his action and recover for the particular damage according to the evidence.”

The phrase used in the foregoing quotation, individuals who in their persons or estates suffer great damage ” comes perhaps as near being a satisfactory expression of the principle as any that has been used. As before indicated, a person whose lot abuts upon the particular piece of street which is unlawfully closed or obstructed is universally held to be specially and peculiarly injured, though he may have other access to his lot; but many of the eases draw an arbitrary line at this point, and maintain that when the plaintiff’s lot fronts upon another part of the street no such injury is shown. Certainly the distinction is illogical. The man whose lot fronts upon the next block may be fully as deeply injured in the decreased value, rentability, and desirability of his lot as the man whose lot fronts on the block which is closed. One may suffer as great damage in his estate as the other. True, there may be many such individual owners, but that cannot affect individual rights. There may be twenty or there may be fifty of them, but if each has suffered great damage to his estate by the unlawful closing of *8a street, why shall not each have his action ? Neither twenty men nor fifty men constitute the general public. The general public is composed of the great mass of individuals who own no property in the vicinity and who may wish to pass over the street or not, and who, if .they do, simply suffer the trifling inconvenience of being obliged to mate a circuitous trip. The man who owns a lot in the next block, and whose lot has lost a great part of its value by reason of the closing of the street, manifestly suffers some injury different in its nature from the mere inconvenience suffered by the general public. There are at least two plaintiffs in the present case who own lots fronting on Eighth street — one in the next block to the east, and the other two blocks to the west of the block attempted to be vacated. The complaint alleges distinctly that the property of each will be greatly depreciated in value by the proposed vacation and occupation of the street We hold this to be a sufficient allegation of special or peculiar injury to entitle them to maintain an action of this kind, and we do not find it necessary to go further or critically examine the rights of the remaining plaintiffs. This conclusion is believed to be in strict harmony with and analogous to the principle adopted in the line of cases holding that where by an unlawful, though temporary, obstruction in a navigable river a manufacturer is deprived of access to his mill and his business damaged thereby, or an improvement company loses tolls, or a logger is put to- additional expense in handling his logs, there is in each case a peculiar injury different from that suffered by the general public who might wish to navigate the river, which will sustain a private action. Enos v. Hamilton, 27 Wis. 256; Wis. River Imp. Co. v. Lyons, 30 Wis. 61; Gates v. N. P. R. Co. 64 Wis. 64, 24 N. W. 494. In each case the special and peculiar injury is simply a direct and substantial loss in money, a damage to the person or estate of an individual traceable directly to the public nuisance, and not common *9to tbe public in general, and so answering the requirements of the text laid down in Stetson v. Faxon, 19 Pick. 147.

Proceeding from this question to the merits of the controversy, we are to consider first the attack upon the ordinance which attempts to vacate all but a twenty-foot strip of Eighth street between Center street and Washington avenue. The charter of the city of Racine (sec. 54, ch. 40, Laws of 1891) gives the common council of the city power to vacate, ,in whole or in part, such streets or alleys in the city “as in their opinion the public interest may require to be vacated, or such as in their opinion are of no public utility.” The section provides for notice of hearing prior to the adoption of the ordinance, and also for the assessment of benefits and damages on request of any party interested.

The ordinance of vacation in the present case declares that the north twenty-five feet in width and the south fifteen feet in width of that part of Eighth street between Center street and Washington avenue is vacated “for the reason that such portions.of said street are of no public utility and for the reason that the public interest requires such vacation.” Although it is alleged in the complaint that the ordinance is void, and that the proceedings resulting in its passage were illegal, irregular, and ultra vires, there is no specific charge of any irregularity or illegality in its passage, nor was it claimed upon the argument that there was any such irregularity or illegality in procedure. The claim is and was that the ordinance of vacation was passed solely for the private benefit of the defendant corporation, and that the public good in no way demanded it, and hence that it was illegal and void. So the question really is whether in this action the validity of the ordinance can be challenged on the ground that the council acted from a wrong motive. Corruption is not claimed, fraud is not claimed, want of power is not claimed, but the simple claim is that the members of the council in exercising their legislative powers acted from im*10proper motives and. subordinated tbe public interest to tbe private interests of tbe defendant corporation.

Tbe general principle that legislative acts witbin tbe power of tbe legislative body to pass are not subject to revision or control by tbe courts on tbe ground of inexpediency, injustice, or impropriety is well settled, and bas nowhere been stated witb greater vigor tban by this court. Tbus, in Brodhead v. Milwaukee, 19 Wis. 624, it was said:

“This court can, and when properly presented must, deal witb and determine questions of tbe power of tbe legislature under tbe constitution; but it cannot lay its band upon or interdict a statute, or arrest its operation, because such statute is either unwise, unjust, or oppressive, there being no question of legislative power involved.”

Tbe supreme court of tbe United States in Angle v. C., St. P., M. & O. R. Co. 151 U. S. 1, 14 Sup. Ct. 240, thus enunciates tbe doctrine:

“Tbe rule, briefly stated, is that whenever an act of tbe legislature is challenged in court tbe inquiry is limited to the question of power, and does not extend to tbe matter of expediency, the motive of tbe legislators, or tbe reasons which are spread before them to induce tbe passage of tbe act. This rule rests upon tbe independence of tbe legislature as one of tbe co-ordinate departments of the government. It would not be seemly for either of tbe three departments to be instituting an inquiry as to whether another acted wisely, intelligently, or corruptly.”

In both of tbe cases quoted from, acts of tbe legislature were under consideration, but tbe same general principle bas been frequently recognized as applicable to' tbe acts of tbe common council which are legislative in their character, as is tbe ordinance under consideration. State ex rel. Rose v. Superior Court, 105 Wis. 651, 81 N. W. 1046; Lange v. La Crosse & E. R. Co. 118 Wis. 558, 95 N. W. 952. It-is true that certain apparent exceptions to tbe rule are recognized, as, for instance, where an ordinance is entirely unreasonable. *11This, however, can hardly he properly called an exception,, 'because it is in fact a case simply of lack of power. Power is not delegated to' municipal bodies to pass ordinances which are wholly unreasonable. An example of this principle is-found in Le Feber v. West Allis, 119 Wis. 608, 97 N. W. 203, where an ordinance granting lighting franchises, which was also a contract, was held void for unreasonableness, and it was said that legislative power was delegated to subordinate political divisions of the state for public purposes only,, and that if an act be so remote from every public purpose that no relation thereto can within human reason be discovered, siich an act must be deemed to be beyond the power of" a subordinate legislative body, and will be set aside by the-courts. See, also, Clason v. Milwaukee, 30 Wis. 316; Stafford v. C. V. E. R. Co. 110 Wis. 331, 85 N. W. 1036, and cases cited.

It is said in McQuillan on Municipal Ordinances (sec.. 161) : “Neither the motives of the members nor the influences" under which they acted can be shoAvn to nullify an ordinance-duly passed in legal form, within the scope of their corporate powers.” Mr. Dillon, in his work on Municipal Corporations, at sec. 311 (4th ed.), says: “It is doubtless true that the courts will not in general inquire into the motives-of the council in passing ordinances.” He follows this statement with the remark: “We suppose it to be a sound proposition that their acts, whether in the form of resolutions or ordir anees, may be impeached for fraud, at the instance of persons injured thereby.'’ This seems to be simply the-author’s own view.

In Soon Ming v. Crowley, 113 U. S. 703, 5 Sup. Ct. 730, it was said by Mr. Justice Yield in the opinion of the court relating to a city ordinance claimed to be unreasonable:

“The rule is general with reference to the enactments of all legislative bodies that the courts cannot inquire into the motives of the legislators in-passing them, except as they *12•may be disclosed on tbe face of the acts or inferable from their operation, considered with reference to the condition ■of the country and existing legislation. The motives of the legislators, considered as the purposes they had in view, will .always be presumed to be to accomplish that which follows as the natural and reasonable effect of their enactments. . . . The diverse characters of such motives, and the impossibility of penetrating into the hearts of men and ascertaining the truth, preclude all such inquiries as impracticable and futile.”

In the case of Knapp-Stout & Co. Co. v. St. Louis, 156 Mo. 343, 56 S. W. 1102, an ordinance vacating part of a street was attacked by a property owner on the street on the same grounds as in the present case, and the court said that in the absence of fraud the passage of such an ordinance comes within the legislative powers expressly delegated to the city by its charter to vacate streets and alleys, and that power will not be controlled or reviewed by the courts. In the case before us neither fraud nor corruption is alleged, so that it is unnecessary for us to consider the suggestion of Mr. Dillon and the Missouri supreme court. The sole claim is that the council have vacated a part of a street for a private use when it was needed by the public. This means that the motives of the councilmen were wrong and their judgment unsound. We think the courts will not entertain an inquiry into the truth of these charges. The ordinance was within their power to pass. On its face it purports to be passed for a purely public purpose. Such a purpose is entirely possible, notwithstanding a private benefit may at the same time inure to the defendant. The exemption from keeping in repair a wide street and the lessened expense of caring for a narrow one may have been considered an entirely adequate public gain to justify the vacation, and who shall say that the aldermen did not have this idea in mind ?

Doubtless had the council attempted to sell and convey a part of the street to the defendant, its action could be held void by the courts, because that would be an act beyond its *13power; but it was within the power of the council to vacate the street, when in its judgment the public interest required such action, and even though the council may have been wrong in its judgment, or may have mistaken a private interest for a public one, our conclusion is that the courts cannot arrest the operation of the ordinance for these reasons^ and hence that no cause of action is stated in the first count of the complaint.

The second count, however, presents an entirely different question. By the ordinance here attacked the council attempted to grant to the defendant the right to bridge over the remaining twenty feet of the street not vacated, and' build buildings to any height thereon, for private uses, provided it left a passageway twenty feet wide and fourteen feet in height, and kept the same lighted, paved, and in repair, as required by the council. It is impossible for us to perceive how it can be claimed that the council had power to grant any such rights to any one in a public street. So long as it remains a street, it is reserved for public uses and for public uses alone, and the council has no power to devote any part of it to private uses, even though that part be merely a part of the space above the roadbed. Elliott, Roads & Streets-(2d ed.) § 647. In Reimer’s Appeal, 100 Pa. St. 182, it was well said, in reference to this identical question of the power of a common council to authorize the building or projections over the street and sixteen feet above the sidewalk:

“The right of passing along or over a road has connected' with it certain incidents which are essential to the enjoyment of it, such as light, air, and view. If a highway should be covered over, for instance, by the owners of property fronting on either side of it, so as to shut out the light from above, the enjoyment would not only be greatly interfered with, but it might often be rendered dangerous and practically useless.”

The same doctrine is held with reference to a private bridge over an alley in the case of Field v. Barling, 149 Ill. *14556, 37 N. E. 850, where a number of authorities along the ;same line are cited and reviewed. Common councils have no authority to turn a street into a tunnel for the purpose of gnanting to private parties for private use the enjoyment of •everything above the tunnel. The proposition needs no authority. The council holds the easement in the street for public use alone. The attempt to divert a part to private use is an attempt to exceed their powers, and hence, under principles already stated, can be controlled by the courts. It follows that the second count in the complaint states a good cause of action.

By the Gourt. — Judgment reversed, and action remanded with directions to enter an order sustaining the demurrer as to the first cause of action, and ovenuling the same as to the second cause of action, and for further proceedings according to law.